Joe Biden Wants 4 More Years 'To Finish the Job.' What Job?
Plus: A listener question scrutinizing current attitudes toward executive power
Plus: A listener question scrutinizing current attitudes toward executive power
The most important part of the Limit, Grow, Save Act is the limits.
The main driver behind the reduction is inflation—inflation that politicians created with their irresponsible spending.
A return to so-called normal order wouldn't fix all of Washington's many problems, but it would be a step in the right direction.
Vernon Smith weighs in on Biden's budget, how government causes inflation, and why bailing out Silicon Valley Bank was a bad idea.
If Republicans refuse to gore their three sacred cows, a new CBO report shows that balancing the budget is literally impossible.
Congress' end-of-year rush to fund the federal government has become the norm.
The higher taxes on small businesses and entrepreneurs could slow growth. Less opportunity means more tribalism and division.
But it's exactly what they need to start talking about.
Krugman sees benefit cuts as "a choice" but believes that implementing a massive tax increase on American employers and workers would be "of course" no big deal.
As legislators refuse to act, benefits will be cut without any possibility of sheltering those seniors who are poor.
Plus: a listener question on prohibition and a lightning round on the editors' favorite Super Bowl moments
Legislators will increasingly argue over how to spend a diminishing discretionary budget while overall spending simultaneously explodes.
Biden vowed to block any attempts to cut Social Security benefits, and Republicans made it clear that they have little appetite to try it.
Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid are still the chief drivers of our future debt. But Republicans aren't touching them.
Taking stock of the utterly unserious fiscal policy discourse in Washington.
While some Republicans may have had misguided motivations, a few disrupted McCarthy's campaign in order to enact fiscal restraint. Their colleagues were fine with business as usual.
If lawmakers keep spending like they are, and if the Fed backs down from taming inflation, then the government may create a perfect storm.
The Congressional Budget Office projects that future deficits will explode. But there's a way out.
Plus: Title 42 order termination is on hold, the FTC vs. Meta, and more...
Plus: The editors extend the discussion on the lack of immigration reform in this week’s bill.
The government spent $501 billion in November but collected just $252 billion in revenue, meaning that about 50 cents of every dollar spent were borrowed.
It's especially outrageous when considering the billions of dollars in fraud that took place thanks to COVID-19 relief programs.
Instead of redirecting course, Biden is continuing Trump’s spending legacy.
If the midterms favor Republicans, their top priority needs to be the fight against inflation—whether or not they feel like they created the problem.
Warnings of inflation and rising interest rates have long been tied to high and rising debt levels.
His administration has expanded deficits by $400 billion more than expected, even before we count recent spending.
So much for the idea that low interest rates meant the government could borrow endlessly with no consequences.
This fiscal irresponsibility throws gasoline on the country's already raging inflation fire.
James Taylor croons while the stock market burns after another ugly report on inflation.
Unsurprisingly, wealthier Americans will be the prime beneficiaries of the White House's soon-to-be-announced student loan forgiveness scheme.
But it will raise taxes and sic thousands of new IRS agents on American households.
Many conservatives no longer appear to care much for fiscal conservatism.
Congress has added $2.4 trillion to the long-term deficit since President Joe Biden took office. Now they want credit for reducing the deficit by $300 billion?
If you believe that moving most of our chip production onshore is good for national security, you should labor for regulatory reforms rather than subsidies.
The proposal reportedly hikes taxes by over $730 billion, with $300 billion of that money to be used for reducing the federal budget deficit.
Dissecting the president's misleading claims about falling deficits
Rising interest rates will only make it harder to balance the budget in future years.
Interest rates and servicing costs could push us into worrisome territory sooner than we think.
...and why government spending is like an infestation of cicadas.
The president is trying to claim credit for falling deficits. Actually, his administration has overseen a $2.4 trillion increase in the long-term deficit.
Several studies have found that the vast majority of costs incurred by increased corporate taxes are passed along to workers in the form of lower wages.
Under current policies, Social Security and Medicare will consume 85 percent of all federal tax revenue by 2050.
Biden gloats over a historically astronomical budget deficit as if he's accomplished something significant. He hasn't.
Democrats hail the new budget agreement as "the largest increase in non-defense discretionary spending in four years" while Republicans tout a big boost in military spending. Everyone wins!
Biden made some vague promises about deficit reduction during Tuesday's State of the Union address. They don't add up.
But Washington just keeps hitting the snooze button.
Enough with the budget gimmicks. It's time for Democrats to admit that Biden's proposal is a long, long way from being fully paid for.
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